This is a suit by an ERISA welfare plan and its administrator (only the latter is a fiduciary and hence a proper plaintiff, ERISA § 502(a)(3), 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(3);
Administrative Committee v. Gauf,
We must consider whether the relief sought by the plan is equitable, because that is the only type of relief that ERISA authorizes a fiduciary to obtain. ERISA § 502(a)(3), 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(3);
Mertens v. Hewitt Associates,
But there is more here. Wells’s lawyer is holding $10,982.61 to which the plan claims to be entitled. Wells wants the claim reduced to reflect the attorneys’ fees she expended in obtaining the settlement of which the $10,982.61 is a part. But since she concedes that some (in fact the bulk) of this amount is rightfully the plan’s, the lawyer’s interception of the entire amount en route from the insurer to the plan is clearly wrongful. In
Health Cost Controls of Illinois, Inc. v. Washington, supra,
Some cases, including our own
Administrative Committee v. Gauf supra,
*402
So we have jurisdiction and can proceed to the merits. The language from the plan document that we quoted earlier seems clear, and clearly to favor the plan's claim. But contracts-which for most purposes ERISA plans are, Herzberger v. Standard Ins. Co.,
It would also gratuitously deter the exercise of the tort rights of plan participants. For one can easily imagine a case in which, under the plan's interpretation, the participant (or nonparticipant beneficiary, such as a spouse or child) would lose part of her plan benefits simply by virtue of having exercised her right to bring a tort suit against a third party. Suppose Wells had obtained a settlement of $12,000 of which her lawyer got $4,000 pursuant to a standard contingent-fee contract, leaving her with $8,000. Since the settlement would exceed $10,982.61, the plan under its theory would be entitled to that entire amount, leaving her worse off by $2,982.61 than she would have been had she not sued. This would be true even if she had sought no medical benefits, or any other benefits available under the plan, in that suit-it might have been a suit purely for damage to her car. This prospect might well deter a suit likely to result in a judgment or settlement not much larger than the benefits available under the plan-and in that event the language on which the plan relies would produce undercompensation for harms that were unrelated to the type of harm to which the benefits pertain. Wells would have been surprised to have been told when she signed onto this plan that as a result of it she might not be able to obtain compensation for tortiously inflicted property damage. The plan itself might well be worse off in the long run, as it would have to incur attorneys' fees in order to enforce its right of subrogation. See Blackburn v. Sundstrand Corp.,
The plan documents neither advert to the anomaly just discussed nor expressly repudiate common-fund principles, and so they do not alter the background understanding of the allocation of attorneys' fees that is embodied in those principles. We interpolate those principles to avoid wreaking unintended consequences. United McGill Corp. v. Stinnett,
That’s a critical qualification. In cases in which the plan documents give the plan’s administrator discretion to interpret the plans, our review is deferential. E.g.,
Mers v. Marriott International Group Accidental Death & Dismemberment Plan,
An amendment in 1996 to the plan that was in force when Wells was injured and sought and received benefits
explicitly
refuses to pick up any part of the plan participant’s attorneys’ fees, as in
Health Cost Controls v. Isbell,
Because the 1996 amendment is inapplicable to this case, we need not consider whether state “common fund” law, see Ind.Code. §§ 34-53-1-2, 34-51-2-19, is applicable at all, because either in terms, Ind.Code § 34-53-1-2, or as a matter of interpretation,
Allstate Ins. Co. v. Smith,
Wells seeks not only a sharing of the attorneys’ fees with the plan, to which she is entitled, but also a, sharing of the reduction of her claim in the settlement by 25 percent to reflect her comparative fault. We are at a loss to understand how that reduction, unlike the expense of the lawyer who obtained the settlement, could be thought to have conferred a benefit on the plan for which it should contribute a part of the cost under common-fund principles. And while Indiana law, were it applicable, might provide the relief she is seeking, see Ind.Code § 34-51-2-19, she does not invoke that or any other provision of Indiana law, and so has waived the argument.
Reversed.
